Upgrading to new React Native versions

Upgrading to new versions of React Native will give you access to more APIs, views, developer tools and other goodies. Upgrading requires a small amount of effort, but we try to make it easy for you. The instructions are a bit different depending on whether you used create-react-native-app or react-native init to create your project.

Expo projects

Upgrading your Expo project to a new version of React Native requires updating the react-native, react, and expo package versions in your package.json file. Please refer to this list to find out what versions are supported. You will also need to set the correct sdkVersion in your app.json file.

Projects built with native code

Projects with Native Code Only

This section only applies to projects made with react-native init or to those made with expo init or Create React Native App which have since ejected. For more information about ejecting, please see the guide on the Create React Native App repository.

Because React Native projects built with native code are essentially made up of an Android project, an iOS project, and a JavaScript project, upgrading can be rather tricky. Here's what you need to do to upgrade from an older version of React Native.

Upgrade based on Git

The module react-native-git-upgrade provides a one-step operation to upgrade the source files with a minimum of conflicts. Under the hood, it consists in 2 phases:

First, it computes a Git patch between both old and new template files,

Then, the patch is applied on the user's sources.

IMPORTANT: You don't have to install the new version of the react-native package, it will be installed automatically.

1. Install Git

While your project does not have to be handled by the Git versioning system -- you can use Mercurial, SVN, or nothing -- you will still need to install Git on your system in order to use react-native-git-upgrade. Git will also need to be available in the PATH.

2. Install the react-native-git-upgrade module

The react-native-git-upgrade module provides a CLI and must be installed globally:

$ npm install -g react-native-git-upgrade

3. Run the command

Run the following command to start the process of upgrading to the latest version:

$ react-native-git-upgrade

You may specify a React Native version by passing an argument: react-native-git-upgrade X.Y.Z

Upon completion, run the following command to find your corresponding git patch file.

You can think of "ours" as "your team" and "theirs" as "the React Native dev team".

Alternative

Use this only in case the above didn't work.

1. Upgrade the react-native dependency

Note the latest version of the react-native npm package from here (or use npm info react-native to check).

Now install that version of react-native in your project with npm install --save:

$ npm install --save react-native@X.Y
# where X.Y is the semantic version you are upgrading to
npm WARN peerDependencies The peer dependency react@~R included from react-native...

If you saw a warning about the peerDependency, also upgrade react by running:

$ npm install --save react@R
# where R is the new version of react from the peerDependency warning you saw

2. Upgrade your project templates

The new npm package may contain updates to the files that are normally generated when you run react-native init, like the iOS and the Android sub-projects.

You may consult rn-diff to see if there were changes in the project template files. In case there weren't any, simply rebuild the project and continue developing. In case of minor changes, you may update your project manually and rebuild.

If there were major changes, run this in a terminal to get these:

$ react-native upgrade

This will check your files against the latest template and perform the following:

If there is a new file in the template, it is simply created.

If a file in the template is identical to your file, it is skipped.

If a file is different in your project than the template, you will be prompted; you have options to keep your file or overwrite it with the template version.

Manual Upgrades

Some upgrades require manual steps, e.g. 0.28 to 0.29, or 0.56 to 0.57. Be sure to check the release notes when upgrading so that you can identify any manual changes your particular project may require.